President Joe Biden has spread a false rumor that former President Donald Trump advised Americans to inject bleach into their bodies to fight the coronavirus. This hoax has been previously debunked by left-wing fact-checkers and others.
Biden was joined by former President Barack Obama and former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi at a fundraising event in Houston, Texas, last week.
“Just a few days ago,” Biden said in a heavily filtered campaign video, [Donald Trump] He famously asked the question at one of his meetings, “Are you better now than you were four years ago?”
The 81-year-old continued: “Well, Donald, I’m glad you asked that question, dude. I just want everyone in this country to kind of remember what March of 2020 was like.” Told.
Biden then re-exposed falsehoods that had already been debunked.
“Remember when he said he would inject bleach? I’m sure he did,” Biden argued.
Biden was referring to a White House press conference in April 2020.
William Bryan is a former senior official at the Department of Homeland Security who served as Under Secretary of State for Science and Technology. Non-peer-reviewed research This demonstrated how disinfectants and sunlight can kill the coronavirus on non-porous surfaces.
President Trump asked Brian if disinfectants such as ultraviolet light could be used in-house to fight the coronavirus.
playing cards said:
thank you very much. So I asked Bill a question that anyone interested in this world is probably thinking about, and I think it’s very interesting. So let’s say we put a tremendous amount of light on our bodies – whether it’s ultraviolet light or just very intense light – and I think you said that it hasn’t been tested. I think I’ll check it out. Then I think you said, assuming you get light into the body, it can be done through the skin or in some other way, and you’re going to test that as well. That looks interesting.
right. And once the disinfectant gets into your eyes, it disappears quickly. Minute. And is there a way to do something like that by injecting it inside or almost cleaning it? Because you can see that it gets into the lungs and has a huge number of effects on the lungs. So it would be interesting to check that out. In other words, you must have the cooperation of your doctor. But it seems interesting to me.
Let’s take a look. But the whole concept of light, how it can extinguish light in a minute, is very powerful.
President Trump did not mention the word “bleach” or advise Americans to ingest chemical detergents as a treatment for the coronavirus.
Even left-wing fact-checkers debunked the bleach hoax.
All sides – Publication Assessing the media bias of news organizations, PolitiFact declared it to be left-leaning. AllSides claimed that PolitiFact has a bias toward being “moderately aligned with liberal, progressive, or left-wing ideas and policy agendas.”
Politifact In July 2020, he declared, “No, Trump is not telling Americans infected with coronavirus to drink bleach.”
Asked about Biden’s comments, President Trump’s press secretary said: newsweek“Crooked Joe Biden continues to demonstrate every day how mentally unfit he is to be president.”
last week, corporate media They took Trump’s comments out of context and concocted a hoax to make it appear as if the former president was calling for political violence if he lost the presidential election. 2024 presidential election.
As Blaze News previously reported, Trump used the word “bloodshed” to refer to the troubles the U.S. auto industry will face if Biden is re-elected. But traditional media apparently intentionally misinterpreted his words to make it seem like he was calling for political violence.
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